It’s been something of a surreal week. It started on Tuesday when I had the chance to meet Tom Wright, the investigative journalist who co-authored the book “Billion Dollar Whale,” about the 1MDB saga in Malaysia, which eventually lead to the historical defeat of Najib Razak and the BN coalition that had ruled Malaysia since independence.
I think of these two events because, during my meeting
with Mr. Wright, he asked me and colleague who was with me, “Do we make a
difference?” I think of this question because it’s the basic question of why do
we do what we do? Is being a good guy worth it? My friend was a good guy who
was devoted to his family yet he died at 51. I’ve known less honourable
characters (the type who happily screw over their own kids) who are alive, healthy
and doing quite nicely thank you very much.
It’s what you call the frustration of being in the
investigation business, where you do a task that’s often dull and yet dangerous.
While the criminals have “criminal loot,” the investigators (think people like
investigative journalist, forensic accountants, public prosecutors and
defenders, whistleblowers and so on), barely get a pat of the back when all is
said and done.
Take Mr. Wright as an example. His book, Billion
Dollar Whale, exposed the scam at 1MDB and how a sitting Prime Minister was
part of an embezzlement of the Malaysian people. That Prime Minister is now in
jail and the party that supported him got thrown out of power but has corruption
in Malaysia been lessened? The answer is probably a depressing no.
If you want to take things onto the global stage,
there’s the example of Watergate. We celebrated the courage of Bob Woodward and
Carl Bernstein in bringing down a president. Yet, we continue to have things
like Iran Contra under Regan, White Water under Clinton and now there’s Trump
who blatantly oversaw the deaths of a multitude of Americans due to his incompetent
handling of Covid.
Like it or not, does appear that despite the efforts
of the “good guys,” the bad guys continue and even thrive. It doesn’t help that
the side with more money inevitably has the power to change the goal post.
So, why bother being a good guy when the bad guys seem
so many steps ahead? Why bother fighting if you know you’ll end up losing
right? Funnily enough I do get that allot from Singaporeans who think that
things like protest are pointless (I had people who could not see why Burmese
protested the Military Coup or things like Black Lives Matter. Many even tell
me I should be grateful for Colonialism.).
The answer is inevitably this – rolling over and
accepting bad things leads to worse outcomes. If you allow fraud to take place
without trying to stop it, you are inevitably condoning it. If you don’t speak up
about genocides against certain people, you are effectively condoning genocide.
Now, you could argue that it doesn’t affect me – who cares?
However, as history has shown, a guy who cheats other
people will one day cheat you. A guy who thinks of murdering one ethnic group
is likely to turn around and start on yours. I go back to my Jewish friend’s
observations of his family history and how many Jews in Europe through Hitler
didn’t mean Jews like them. You hear allot of the same rhetoric in America from
Hispanics who talk about ICE dragging people off the streets as “Its not people
like us.” Hitler didn’t mean people like them – until he did.
So, why do we do what we do? I like to think that when
we catch crooks and protest tyrants, we do our part to ensure that we don’t rot
completely. Think of it as, I do my part to ensure it doesn’t happen to me,
which is again, idealistic but the message is there. You are just an individual
but you have the power to inspire others and a collective becomes very powerful.
People who think, I’m just a nobody so why bother set themselves up to be
steamrollered by the scum.

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